Litcius/Paper detail

Convergence of location, direction, and theta in the rat anteroventral thalamic nucleus

Eleonora Lomi, Kathryn J. Jeffery, Anna S. Mitchell

2023iScience19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The thalamus and cortex are anatomically interconnected, with the thalamus providing integral information for cortical functions. The anteroventral thalamic nucleus (AV) is reciprocally connected to retrosplenial cortex (RSC). Two distinct AV subfields, dorsomedial (AVDM) and ventrolateral (AVVL), project differentially to granular vs. dysgranular RSC, respectively. To probe if functional responses of AV neurons differ, we recorded single neurons and local field potentials from AVDM and AVVL in rats during foraging. We observed place cells (neurons modulated by spatial location) in both AVDM and AVVL. Additionally, we characterized neurons modulated by theta oscillations, heading direction, and a conjunction of these. Place cells and conjunctive Theta-by-Head direction cells were more prevalent in AVVL; more non-conjunctive theta and directional neurons were prevalent in AVDM. These findings add further evidence that there are two thalamocortical circuits connecting AV and RSC, and reveal that the signaling involves place information in addition to direction and theta.

Topics & Concepts

Retrosplenial cortexThalamusChromatin structure remodeling (RSC) complexNeuroscienceNucleusCortex (anatomy)BiologyPhysicsNucleosomeHistoneBiochemistryGeneNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchMemory and Neural MechanismsNeural dynamics and brain function